Despite some groovy camerawork (Sven Nykvist) a load of silly, meaningless and unattractive jibble.
Sunday, 30 November 2008
Sunday, 19 October 2008
Bob Le Flambeur (1956 Jean-Pierre Melville)
Henri Decae also shot Le Samourai and Les 400 Coups and the location feel and American attitude no doubt influenced the New Wave.
Sunday, 12 October 2008
Straw Dogs (1972 Sam Peckinpah)
With neat irony, Hoffman’s maths professor has picked the wrong fight in protecting David Warner, who has just (albeit accidentally) killed village strumpet Sally Thomsett (who I suspect of killing the cat). At the moment when he fears his wife Susan George will switch sides to old beau Charlie (Del Henney), he specifically becomes his rival, striking her, then pulling her by the hair, both of which Charlie has inflicted on her prior to the bizarre rape turned love scene turned gang rape. So whilst there’s audience pleasure in seeing the bad guys wiped out, are we also to acknowledge this as an anti-violence statement?
One thing’s for sure: this mismatched couple isn’t going to make it.
Along with those mentioned above, Ken Hutchison is also impressive as the ‘bad’ rapist, in a uniformly excellent cast.
Interesting to see the name of Tony Lawson as one of the editors. There’s occasional time jump editing in this that figures strongly in his work for Nic Roeg (from Bad Timing onwards), and also in Peckinpah’s later Cross of Iron, which along with Barry Lyndon Lawson also edited. And, I don’t know if it’s just me, but I love John Coquillon’s grey skies!
117m 16 secs submitted to BBFC = 113 m Video
Sunday, 5 October 2008
Hiroshima, Mon Amour (1959 Alain Resnais)
Sunday, 8 April 2007
Breaking the Waves (1996 Lars Von Trier)
Sunday, 25 March 2007
The Yearling (1946 Clarence Brown)
Casino Royale (2006 Martin Campbell)
Craig excellent (cool but vulnerable). Villain draws on tradition of European actors, Mads Mikkelsen more credible than other villains, but weedy. Didn't even recognise Giancarlo Giannini as Mathis. Paul Haggis had a hand in better-than-usual script. No campy humour, minimum gadgets. Great torture scene. Phil Méheux has come a long way since Out (remembered this after ?30 years). Arnold's score really a John Barry copy. Absolutely amazing standard-setting stunt / chase early scene free-running. It's long, but there's no 'big' set piece final shoot out: a definite plus.
Sunday, 18 March 2007
Ashes and Diamonds (1958 Andrzej Wajda)
Sunday, 11 March 2007
Kanal (1957 Andrzej Wajda)
Sunday, 7 January 2007
Die Büchse der Pandora / Pandora's Box (1928, rel 1929, Georg Wilhelm Pabst)
Watch the featurette.
Louise Brooks, Fritz Kortner, Francis Lederer
Ph. Günther Krampf
Sunday, 24 December 2006
Lancelot du Lac (1974 Robert Bresson)
*A long time after writing this, Michael Palin confirmed that they had!
Sunday, 17 December 2006
Two-Lane Blacktop (1971 Monte Hellman)
With its non-professional, minimalist performances, script, and lack of lighting and incidental music, this could be an early work of Dogme, directed by Bresson. Warren Oates has funny lines as he lies to a succession of hitchers.
Laurie Bird was living with Art Garfunkel when she killed herself eight years later. According to 'Fragile Geometry' (Joseph Lanza), Garfunkel had a fatal premonition of her while filming Bad Timing. He was about to return to the US for more filming when he heard she'd killed herself, the same way as Milena attempts it in the film.
They sure knew how to do film endings in the seventies.
Sunday, 10 December 2006
Bully (2001 Larry Clark)
Typically raw and compelling take on true story by Vietnam vet/photographer Clark, whose Ken Park is so controversial it's only available from the Netherlands. Good music compilation.
Sunday, 12 November 2006
Oldboy (2003 Chan-Wook Park)
Fabulous performance by Min-Sik Choi.
Mix of Shakespearean tragedy and ultra-violent comic book is a bit silly really, but truly memorable, fascinating and nasty.
Sunday, 19 September 2004
The Anniversary Party (2001 Alan Cumming, Jennifer Jason Leigh)
Interesting, apparently.
Saturday, 22 November 2003
Lantana (2001 Ray Lawrence)
With Anthony LaPaglia, Rachel Blake, Kerry Armstrong.
DP Mandy Walker.
Excellent. Good music.
Anger Management (2003 Peter Segal)
Jack Nicholson, Adam Sandler, Marisa Tomei, Luis Guzman.
Got funnier as it went along, apparently.
Bringing Down the House (2003 Adam Shankman)
Steve Martin, Queen Latifah, Eugene Levy, Joan Plowright.
Good fun. (Can't remember a thing about it now.)
Edited by Jerry Greenberg
Sunday, 16 November 2003
The One and Only (2002 Simon Cellan Jones)
Newcastle kitchen builder with cute African child wins pregnant girl. OK.
Justine Waddell, Richard Roxburgh, Jonathan Cake, Patsy Kensit.
DP Remi Adefarasin, composer Gabriel Yared, editor Pia di Ciaula.
I didn't realise at the time it's a remake of Susanne Bier's original Den Eneste Ene (1999) with Borgen's Sidse Babett Knudsen and The Killing's Sofie Gråbøl (not, unfortunately, subtitled for English).
Hable Con Ella / Talk To Her (2002 Pedro Almodóvar & scr)
Javier Camara good in the lead, good story. Screenplay won Oscar.